Essential features and origin Sappho and Alcaeus' verses differ from most other Greek lyric poetry in their
metrical construction: • Verses consist of a fixed number of syllables (thus, for example, no
resolution, contraction, or
biceps elements). • Consecutive
anceps syllables may occur, especially at the beginning of the verse (where two initial anceps syllables are called the
aeolic base). (This forms an exception to the principle, otherwise observed in Greek verse, that two successive unmarked elements are not permitted. Lines beginning with multiple anceps syllables are also exceptional in not being classifiable as having rising or falling rhythm.)
Antoine Meillet and later scholars, by comparison to
Vedic meter, have seen in these principles and in other tendencies (the sequence ... – u u – u – ..., the alternation of blunt and pendant verses conserved traces of
Proto-Indo-European poetic practices. In Sappho and Alcaeus, the three basic metrical groups – u u – u – (dodrans or choriambo-cretic), – u u – (
choriamb) and – u – (
cretic) figure importantly, and groups are sometimes joined (in what is probably a Greek innovation) by a link anceps. Aeolic poems may be
stichic (with all lines having the same metrical form), or composed in more elaborate
stanzas or
strophes.
Choriambic nucleus and expansion One analysis of Aeolic verses' various forms identifies a choriambic nucleus ( – u u – ), which is sometimes subject to: • dactylic expansion (some number of
dactyls preceding the choriamb, or "prolongation" of the pattern that alternates long elements with double-short elements); • choriambic expansion ("juxtaposition" of additional choriambs). For example, an
Asclepiad may be analyzed as a
glyconic with choriambic expansion (
glc,
gl2c), and a glyconic with dactylic expansion produces the stichic length (x x – u u – u u – u u – u – , or
gl2d) in which Sappho composed the poems collected in Book II. In this analysis, a wide variety of Aeolic verses (whether in Sappho and Alcaeus, or in later choral poetry) are analyzed as a choriambic nucleus (sometimes expanded, as just mentioned), usually preceded by anceps syllables and followed by various single-short sequences (e.g. u – , u – u – , and, by the principle of
brevis in longo, u – u – – , u – – , – ), with various additional allowances to accommodate the practice of the later poets. By also taking the cretic unit, mentioned above, into account, this analysis can also, for example, understand the third line of the
Alcaic stanza—and other stanza lines as in Sappho frr. 96, 98, 99—as Aeolic in nature, and appreciate how the initial three syllables of the
Sapphic hendecasyllable were not variable in Sappho's practice.
Names of basic lengths Ancient metricians such as
Hephaestion give us a long list of names for various Aeolic lengths, to which modern scholars have added. For the most part, these names are arbitrary or even misleading, but they are widely used in scholarly writing. The following are the names for units with an unexpanded "choriambic nucleus" (i.e.: – u u – ): Comparison, with "choriambic nucleus" emphasized: x x
– u u – u – – (
hipp) x
– u u – u – – (^
hipp) x x
– u u – u – (
gl) x
– u u – u – (^
gl) x x
– u u – – (
pher) x
– u u – – (^
pher) ==Sappho and Alcaeus' verse==